| Vittorio Mezzogiorno, Mathilda May,
Stefan Glowacz, Brad Dourif, Donald Sutherland
Werner Herzog's cinema of obsession (Aguirre: The Wrath of God,
Fitzcarraldo) has always owed some of its emotional expressionism
to the post-World War I genre of German mountain films (The Blue
Light, The White Hell of Pitz-Palu), in which German mountain climbers
are compelled to scale the heights of dangerous mountain peaks,
achieving a form of purification and superiority. It was inevitable
that at some point Herzog would tackle a mountain. Finally, with
Cerro Torre: Schrei Aus Stein, he does. Donald Sutherland stars
as Ivan, a journalist who instigates a rivalry between Roccia (Vittorio
Mezzogiorno), a professional mountain climber who has braved the
highest mountain peaks in the world, and Martin (Stefan Glowacz),
a champion athlete of indoor climbing walls. But Roccia doesn't
need a reporter to fuel a rivalry between the two, since Katharina
(Mathilda May), Roccia's lover, is attracted to Martin. Ivan arranges
for a TV special chronicling the efforts of Roccia, Martin, Katharina,
and Ivan to conquer the peak of the unconquered Cerro Torre granite
tower in Chile. Roccia keeps postponing the climb until finally
Martin heads off to climb Cerro Torre by himself, accompanied only
by a television crew. But the result of that journey causes Roccia
to avoid the press, while Martin is greeted with skepticism. This
unhappy response to their initial attempt causes Ivan, Roccia, Martin,
and Katharina to confront the formidable peak again for a final
confrontation with the silent mountain. |